Invitation to a Vampire
This was seen when the Salvatores opted to bestow ownership the Salvatore Boarding House to Elena Gilbert so she could use it as a safe house after Klaus came to Mystic Falls.
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Elijah Mikaelson was able to bypass the protection of the Guerrera Mansion in a similar manner by presumably compelling a city official to invoke imminent domain upon the home, giving it heritage status and therefore making the home open to the public without invitation. If the ownership of a home changes while a vampire is still inside, there can be very violent side effects.
However, while Elijah was kept daggered and unconscious in the basement cellar of the house, the Salvatore brothers had a lawyer transfer ownership to Elena in order to use it as a " safe house " from any vampires who try to hurt or abduct her for Klaus. When Elena undaggered Elijah some days later, Elijah immediately became disoriented upon reawakening and was unable to breathe, which made it difficult to properly control his body during his desperate attempts to get out of the house, causing him to accidentally into several walls in his frantic attempt to leave the house.
It seems unlikely that a fully conscious vampire could be forced into a house where they had not been invited. A vampire who is conscious and in the home of a human when the ownership changes, the vampire will be violently ejected from the house by a magical force. Stefan and Caroline were both still inside the boarding house at the time, and the former was forcibly yanked backward out the doors to the balcony and into the backyard below, while Caroline was pulled out into the hall and down the stairs by an invisible force until the housekeeper finally invited Caroline in, stopping the ejection process.
However, there do seem to be loopholes to this weakness for very rare vampiric beings. For example, the true immortal Silas was able to enter homes of non-vampires without invitation, but this is most likely due to the fact that while immortals do survive on the blood of the living, Silas was still alive and therefore was undead like vampires and hybrids. Unlike its TV counterpart, vampires can enter homes into which they are invited in by anyone in the house at the time, whether they're the owner, a resident, or a guest.
In Klaus , it is shown that while a vampire who has been invited into a house cannot technically have their invitation revoked, there is a loophole to this rule—if the ownership of a house changes, then the vampire will have to be re-invited by the new owner. It is possible that Elijah had also been pulled out by the same effect that tore Stefan from a house in later seasons, which could have made it the reason why Elijah had trouble leaving and seemed disoriented. Ancient vampires might not be subjected to this weakness, suggested by Bill who drank Lillith's whole remaining blood and Warlow that has never been invited to Sookie's house.
The death of the human owner of a residence allows any vampire to enter even without an invitation. Some traditions also hold that a vampire cannot enter a house unless invited by the owner, although after the first invitation they can come and go as they please. If a vampire would stand inside a house when it was built would he be albe to leave?
Why do vampires have to be invited in? - Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange
Is there any down side to being a vampire in modern fiction? How did Silas get inside Caroline's house? Home Questions Tags Users Unanswered. Why do vampires have to be invited in? This question already has an answer here: Pobrecita 6, 4 32 Although one answer attempts to speak to multiple fictional continua, you need to quantify in what fictional universe you are asking -- not all vampires need invited in; it depends on the author. I think what you may be trying to ask is more along the lines of "What is the origin of the tradition seen in multiple fictional settings that Vampires must be invited in to enter a dwelling?
And answered by people who are fluent in Latin? A plot device to give the villagers some safe ground. Given that the vampires are usually depicted as strong, fast, clever, with hypnotic-like powers, you need some rules garlic, need of invitation to provide some leveling ground to humans. So the vampire thinks about their decision to allow entrance to the vampire that turned them, and justifies it: They bring this on themselves, as I brought it upon myself. Perhaps vampires really don't have any great strength, can't turn into mists or bats and fly, etc, etc.
They're actually rather sickly except that they have fairly strong psychic powers.
Invitation
Not so strong as to be able to overpower someone who stands up to them with a clear mind, but strong enough to overcome the weak or clouded mind. Considering their strangeness, most people get a "bad feeling" about them, but those who are weak or inattentive enough to invite them in are weak enough to be overcome psychically. Perhaps vampires can control some minds but not others. It's a genetic thing, like having allergies. The request may be anything unusual, not just entering a house, and it's a test to see if they can control the intended victim or not. Perhaps vampires have no psychic abilities at all, but rather rely on a psychotropic drug, and the request is a test of whether they were able to administer a sufficient dose.
Administering it is an art in the air, in food, etc , and you can't administer too much or the victim passes out in public, or perhaps dies and is toxic, so you need just enough to assure compliance, but not so much as to cause trouble or spoil the meal. Last, are you sure it's entering another's house uninvited. Wasn't the famous movie line about the victim entering the vampire's house of their own free will? I like the psychology angle.
It depends on what vampire literature you're reading.
Consider that perhaps they can , but they just don't. Vampires are traditionally vile creatures, and there's a certain poetry to the limitation. It mirrors a condition in the human mind of inviting one's own troubles upon oneself. It's a trope in fiction, really. At the end of the story, when the hero has lost and the villain has won or at least it so appears , the villain gloats that the hero was in part responsible for the outcome, often using lines such as "you invited all this on yourself" or "you have nobody to blame but yourself.
As the traditionally vile and poetic creatures that vampires are, maybe they appreciate the irony and use this strategy of only entering when invited to ensure that their own desire for drama as well as food is fulfilled.
Could the 'love' in a home be unbearable for the vampire, unless an act of kindness is extended from the people in the home, i. Love does include chemical processes in the brain. And some left-behind empathic wiring in the brain of the vampire could go into a very painful overdrive, that could be cancelled by the invitation. Vampires are extremely territorial. For a vampire to enter another vampire's territory uninvited is an act of naked aggression that will be met with immediate and unrestrained force. This generally benefits humans, as the secretive nature of vampires means they cannot be sure which homes are claimed by another, unknown vampire, who might ambush them while they are vulnerable in the act of feeding.
The invitation serves two purposes. Firstly, it serves to soothe the vampire's instincts that warn against leaving its own territory. Secondly, it indicates to vampire that the home is not part of another vampire's territory. Through subtle hormonal alteration applied directly into the bloodstream, vampires affect the dispositions of the humans upon which they feed. A drawn human will become reclusive, suspicious, and share the vampire's extreme territoriality.
The invitation to enter, given without duress, is a clear signal that the human does not live in a dwelling claimed by another vampire. This is your best bet: Radiation emitted by the human body. Yes, all objects, including human bodies, emit electromagnetic radiation. The wavelength of radiation emitted depends on the temperature of the objects.
Such radiation is sometimes called thermal radiation. Most of the radiation emitted by human body is in the infrared region, mainly at the wavelength of 12 micron. Why do vampires have to be invited in?
Greece is one of the oldest source s for the contemporary vampire legend. It produced the first modern writer on vampires, Leone Allacci, in Xenia is the Greek relationship between two people from different regions. It's the same reason Highlanders don't fight in church. It's not that they can't, they just don't. Conduct is very important when you're immortal. So, entering one's house without permission is a faux pas that they won't commit, but they'll murder the same person? Vampires have a very strange definition of "polite".
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The host is honor-bound to sustain feed you once you're invited in. Proper guests do not disrespect their host by declining dinner, thieve, nor break and enter. My point is that once you invite them in they can't break and enter anymore , it's no longer murder and they can no longer thieve the sustenance they need from you, as it has been freely and automatically offered up due to the standard protocol of hospitality.
Why Can’t Vampires Enter A Home Without Being Invited?
Parasite Manipulation is where a parasite invades a host and then forces it into behavior outside its norm. The mosquitoes are significantly more attracted to human breath and odors than uninfected mosquitoes. These ants will move down onto the jungle floor out in the open a complete anti-survival trait for them before becoming immobilized by the cordyceps which then bursts its spoors over a wide area to infect more ants.
In short, your vampires might be hosts to some killer virus that alters their metabolisms to feed off of blood. As a bonus, it heightens their senses, increases their reflexes and strength and their ability to heal. In payment, it 'abhors' certain kinds of smells, perhaps the pheromones emitted by uninfected humans when they feel safe cause the virus to avoid the area and instead prefer areas where humans are emitting sexual pheromones such as near a bar or maybe where prostitutes hang out.
This would be way beyond deep at a near instinctual level and would be extremely hard for an infected vampire to fight or ignore. Yes, in the concept of world building one needs to accommodate the physical nonsense of vampirism such as how much blood is needed for a vampire to live, where they sleep, what kind of capes they wear and all that superficial bullshit. If a vampires hungry, just go and attack some schlub at a tavern, drain him dry and leave his corpse for the rats. But you want to recruit a new vampire for your army of underlings? Befriend them… Seduce them… Promise them eternal life… Let them live forever!
A long time ago, so much that noone but a few of us remember it, when vampires and humans! It ended with the Peace of the resting places , and one of its most important provisions was that vampires would no longer enter into a human home unless invited to do so. It also forbid humans from killing a vampire during the day, but they were not so constrained by the Pact and breached it. The informed reader will inmediatly recognise this as pure fantasy. There's no way the human forces already quite weakened after the many deaths just for fun by some irresponsible vampires, which ultimately led to the cities joining against us in such war could have defeated the vampire army.
And even if such thing could have occurred, it would have been a very stupid move, should they have held such power. Truth to be told, vampires could have easily wiped out all the humans. In fact, the problem was that they would have wiped out all the humans. Leading to starvation of most vampires on the upcoming winter. Presenting the result as a defeat, ending with this "peace treaty" was a genius movement by our leader:. Due to their vampiric nature, blood pacts are transitive.
You are affected by those affecting the vampire that converted you. As this event happened in the early beginning, it affects pretty much to all the vampire community but leaves room for having a few vampires immune to it. It could be a spiritual obstacle, since vampires are creatures of pure 'evil' and a home is a place of spiritual strength and warmth. Once the owner gives permission for 'evil' to enter the home, the spiritual lock is broken.
Similarly the vampire reaction to the crucifix is an extreme reaction of a pure 'evil' being to an object holding strong powers of 'good'. Several authors have said that their vampires have a problem because of the innate power true homes acquire over time. This leads to the implication that the less time you spend in the home, the less power in its domain it has. In fact, Jim Butcher shows a demon trying to get into his home and notes that the power of his home would hold off the demon for a little while but not forever.
Admittedly, this idea sprang to mind after seeing some of the options listed by Liesmith's answer. It could be that humans leave behind some sort of evidence of their residence; either a scent, or something similar that supernatural beings can detect with a sense we don't.
The mythology
However, just as the substance of oxytocin is claimed to affect trust and hormones are a real physical trait that impact people's emotions, this is sort of the same concept possibly going in a reverse direction -- the real physical acts of letting down one's guard and entrusting a person cause a physical impact on the world. Humans are not quite so affected by the resulting aura, but a supernatural creature does benefit. Sleep tends to cause one of the ingredients in the air which might combine with some other ingredients to cause the barrier , so places like homes and hotel rooms are saturated with a protective element that you don't find in a sports arena or a grocery store.
This might be combined with Liesmith's concept of Legal impact. The idea of the "legal" threat could come from peers like he mentioned, or some other supernatural power. Perhaps vampires know that their actions, considered horrendous by the victim species known as humans, are actually condoned by divine ruling. Alternatively, instead of a legal threat from another species, the chemicals in the air could reduce the vampire's strength or increase its mortality, so that even a child could kill a vampire.
This might be caused by a side effect; if the vampire violates the supernatural law, not only is he weaker than a child, but the resulting air chemical is likely to cause intense hatred within the human, causing an otherwise-normally-peaceful human to want to kill any supernatural creature, even if the human doesn't rationally know that the creature is supernatural.
Such a setup might be useful for one vampire who exploits the rules to get another vampire in trouble. By violating the rules, he causes another nearby vampire to be detected as the vulnerable recipient of lethal hate. Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site the association bonus does not count.
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